klyph
Well-Known Member
Oxygen is a drug.
Morons.
Morons.
Senator Folmer considers alcohol to be a drug and is concerned about how it is distributed. The Senator is especially concerned with its
availability to minors. If expanded, there will be more opportunity for
minors to obtain beer illegally. Senator Folmer prefers maintaining the
current restrictions.
I'm speechless. We are officially being ruled by the dumbest members of society. By that logic, he should support nothing short of prohibition.
Can you point to an article for that? I'd like to read about it and contact my reps.
Also, in case anyone is wondering, I contacted both my senator and my representative last night and got this response back from Senator Mike Folmer:
http://www.philly.com/philly/news/local/87198127.html
I contacted my state reps as well and Marguerite Quinn responded with some interesting information including the petition for hearings on the matter. I'd definitely have to register my disagreement with Folmer if he was representing me.
...and the beat goes on:
http://www.philly.com/philly/restau...de__Beer_Raid_backfires_on_liquor_agents.html
Harrisburg enforcement officials say the reason is to protect consumers. How else to know whether the beer is from Victory (legit) or a backyard home-brewer (not)?
Seems like Senator Folmer needs to be reminded that he works for the people who elected him. If the majority of his constituents want less regulation of beer then his personal opinions on the issue do not matter. He wasn't elected to make decisions based on his views solely but the views of you who voted him into office. I would kindly reply back to his staffer since Folmer will never even see the original email you sent that Folmer just lost your vote and many other votes for supporting such an archaic system full of flawed logic. A vowed vote to someone else might wake the man up, especially if he gets enough of them.
Second point. IF they were really concerned about underage drinking instead of this horse **** about beer registration they could start with stings at their very own state ran liquor stores. They could probably nab plenty of people buying booze for younger friends and handing it off in the parking lot. Not that I support those sort of tactics but there are easier targets for them and the underage drinking excuse is a moot point. Plenty of other states have the same problem probably with in the margin of statistical error when it comes to underage drinking.
I think that often times in order to "serve" in public office you must go in for a common sense altering brain surgery. If they all had common sense there would be no reason for them to be full time "public servants" (in "" because many think we're their servants). When you throw a lack of common sense in the mix then you have hours upon hours of senseless debate causing budgets to go 3+ months past due.
... I don't know how I'd ever be able to buy beer from reputable brewers.
I really wish I knew how all of this worked. Here is the so-called "approved" list.
http://www.lcbapps.lcb.state.pa.us/webapp/registered_brands.asp
But I clearly don't see Iron Hill Brewery (or their parent company Chesapeake & Delaware Brewing Company LLC) listed, and they're one of the biggest brewpubs selling their beer! Is this list only for people selling outside of their own pubs?
I'm sure plenty of the PA folks on here could find more glaring omissions. This past Fall I picked up Weyerbacher's Imperial Pumpkin Ale at my distributor and it's not on the list either. This whole thing is ridiculous, and I'm glad to see this raid may have the opposite effect of its intentions.
I guess we shouldn't eat a freshly baked cake from our wives either because it might not be legit.
You can eat it all you want... I don't want it served to me at a restaurant though.
You can eat it all you want... I don't want it served to me at a restaurant though.
I'm sure you've ate a restaurant not owned by a corporate chain.... right?
Yes, and I am positive that I can check the public health records of each of them.![]()
Yes, and I am positive that I can check the public health records of each of them.![]()
I find it puzzling that someone would be in favor for having to register beer on a homebrew site.
I'm not... I am, however, not in favor of eating food from Jane Doe's kitchen when in a restaurant![]()
I'm not... I am, however, not in favor of eating food from Jane Doe's kitchen when in a restaurant![]()
P.S. what makes you think Rick Nichols has any ill-will towards homebrewers?
Harrisburg enforcement officials say the reason is to protect consumers. How else to know whether the beer is from Victory (legit) or a backyard home-brewer (not)?
Because of this statement:
Implying that home brewed beer is something you need to be protected from.
Not only does this not relate in any way to the topic at hand, but your logic is absurd. I could go on and on about how health inspections are a joke, but I don't want to drive you to a forced state of paranoid anorexia.
To bring this back to the topic:
This was not done to protect consumers from drinking dangerous products, it was done to enforce a government revenue source. It's not about keeping you safe, it's about keeping your money.